Food in synchrony with melatonin and corticosterone relieves constant light disturbed metabolism

    1. Ruud M Buijs1
    1. 1Department of Physiology and Cellular Biology, Biomedical Research Institute, UNAM, DF, México
    2. 2Department of Cellular Physiology, Faculty of Science, UASLP, San Luis Potosí, México
    3. 3Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, UNAM, DF, México
    1. Correspondence should be addressed to R M Buijs; Email: ruudbuijs{at}gmail.com

    Abstract

    Circadian disruption is associated with metabolic disturbances such as hepatic steatosis (HS), obesity and type 2 diabetes. We hypothesized that HS, resulting from constant light (LL) exposure is due to an inconsistency between signals related to food intake and endocrine-driven suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) outputs. Indeed, exposing rats to LL induced locomotor, food intake and hormone arrhythmicity together with the development of HS. We investigated whether providing temporal signals such as 12-h food availability or driving a corticosterone plus melatonin rhythm could restore rhythmicity and prevent the metabolic disturbances under LL conditions in male rats. Discrete metabolic improvements under these separate treatments stimulated us to investigate whether the combination of hormone treatment together with mealtime restriction (12-h food during four weeks) could prevent the metabolic alterations. LL exposed arrhythmic rats, received daily administration of corticosterone (2.5 µg/kg) and melatonin (2.5 mg/kg) in synchrony or out of synchrony with their 12-h meal. HS and other metabolic alterations were importantly ameliorated in LL-exposed rats receiving hormonal treatment in synchrony with 12-h restricted mealtime, while treatment out of phase with meal time did not. Interestingly, liver bile acids, a major indication for HS, were only normalized when animals received hormones in synchrony with food indicating that disrupted bile acid metabolism might be an important mechanism for the HS induction under LL conditions. We conclude that food-elicited signals, as well as hormonal signals, are necessary for liver synchronization and that HS arises when there is conflict between food intake and the normal pattern of melatonin and corticosterone.

    Keywords
    • Received 12 August 2017
    • Accepted 29 August 2017
    • Made available online as an Accepted Preprint 29 August 2017
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